How to Say No and Keep Your Friends


Book Description

Tells how to deal with negative peer pressure, explains how to make a good decision, and discusses behavior related to tobacco, alcohol, drugs, and sex.




Peer Pressure Reversal


Book Description




Living with Peer Pressure and Bullying


Book Description

Examines the nature of these two common behaviors, the effects they have, and how teens can combat them. Covers the coercive power of peer pressure, the risks and rewards of telling the truth, cyberbullying, and helping others cope with bullying.




Handbook on Counseling Youth


Book Description

Thoroughly researched, this easy-to-use handbook is designed to help parents, teachers, pastors and youth workers guide today's young people through the minefields of adolescence. From simple challenges to major crises, this book will equip adults to help youth cope with situations involving emotional issues, abuse, addictions, family issues, disorders, sexual issues and much more.




Doing Drugs and Dropping Out


Book Description

This report assesses the societal costs of substance abuse--especially cocaine and crack addition--and dropping out of school. It is organized around three themes: (1) the impact of cocaine and crack abuse in terms of crime, public spending, and lost productivity; (2) policies that move addicts away from crack; and (3) policies that reduce the high school dropout rate. Based on extant literature, the report quantifies a bottom-line cost of drug abuse to have been between $60.4 billion and $124.9 billion in 1988, a figure that reflects the costs of health care, economic loss, and law enforcement relating to substance abuse. Impact also is assessed in terms of private and social issues. In evaluating the success of policies that have effectively moved addicts away from drugs, important questions concerning criteria for success, motivation for drug use, and addiction are explored. Law enforcement, treatment, educational, and prevention policies are evaluated. The current literature on testing, outpatient treatment, and peer programs to reduce the motivation toward drug abuse and to move addicts away from cocaine and crack is reviewed. In response to the issue of dropout prevention, the report recommends a rethinking of the structure of high schools within a collaborative context involving parents, schools, and communities. Included in the report are a working bibliography and a community service booklet that deals with the issues of this report on a local community level. (NB)




Resisting Peer Pressure for Teens


Book Description

In Resisting Peer Pressure for Teens, young writers show that it’s possible to stand up to the pressure they may feel from friends and some family members to be "cool." Inspire teen and preteen readers to take responsibility for and make wiser decisions about their lives with the essays in this book—each written by a teenager. Within these pages, Jamel A. Salter, Fan Yi Mok, and Charlene George, and many others, describe how and why they chose to keep it real and fight back against the pressure they felt from friends to use drugs and alcohol; have sex too early; lie, cheat, and steal; and skip or act out in school. Essays include: My Secret Love Losing My Friends to Weed Why Do So Many Teens Cheat? Can't Afford to Follow Hiding My Talent No More Why I Speak My Mind Sex Doesn't Make You a Man My So-Called Friends Making Me Dance Peer Pressure Ended Our Relationship I Want to Be Pretty and Popular The Trouble with Being a Virgin Thinking for Myself and more! Through these essays, teen readers will pick up new ways to say no and advice that will help them stay true to themselves, while parents, teachers, and caregivers will be provided a much-needed glimpse into how the world looks to our younger generations.




Living Smart


Book Description




Not Better-- Not Worse-- Just Different


Book Description

Sharon Scott with 30 years counseling experience has written this book to teach children in grades K to 5, to be kind to one another. Nicholas, her Cocker Spaniel co-author, uses his animal friends, Shawn, Many, Cedric, and Katy to teach children how to accept and respect all types of differences as well as what to do if they become the target of a bully.




Job Corps Alcohol and Other Drugs of Abuse (AODA) Education Unit


Book Description

The National Office of Job Corps, in its continuing effort to provide education and training, set the development of a competency-based drug education curriculum as a goal for PY 1991. Alcohol and drug abuse is one of the most serious problems facing the United States. The Job Corps population is at risk because the students are at an age of experimentation, when negative peer pressure can be especially alluring and because many of them come from disadvantaged families susceptible to substance abuse. Students need to know the dangers associated with the use of alcohol and other drugs. They must develop personal and social skills that enable them to develop life-enhancing alternatives to drug use, and the self-esteem and ability to say no to enticement and pressure. The Alcohol and Other Drugs of Abuse (AODA) unit will help students understand why alcohol and other drugs are used and abused, the negative effects of a number of substances, and will teach them a decision-making model to help them make positive choices. The unit will be offered in the Health Education Program (HEP).




How to Say No And Keep Your Friends


Book Description

Tells how to deal with negative peer pressure, explains how to make a good decision, and discusses behavior related to tobacco, alcohol, drugs, and sex.